Copy the code below to embed the WBUR audio player on your site

Chef David Chang's new Netflix show "Ugly Delicious" dives deep into how some of his favorite kinds of foods — from pizza to fried chicken — are made all over the world.

Chang (@davidchang) tells Here & Now's Jeremy Hobson the term that became the show's title originated as an Instagram hashtag, and an inside joke with his cooks.

"The most delicious stuff is like a bowl of curry on rice, and that's not gonna inspire a cookbook or a cover of a Bon Appétit magazine," Chang says. "And all of this food is sometimes not being told, and it's not being appreciated enough in the world we live in right now."

Interview Highlights

On deciding which foods to focus on in the show

"It was hard to figure out what we were even gonna do, so we narrowed it down to just themes, and then those themes became, 'Wait, why don't we just talk about specific foods, and go down that rabbit hole, and how that intersects with culture and something like pizza or fried chicken, or the idea of barbecue.' So that was it. It was like, 'OK, let's talk about the stories that sometimes are told. But we're gonna create conversations in ways that maybe people really wanna talk about pizza, or fried chicken.' "

"There's no universal truth about any food."

David Chang

On talking with chefs like Mark Iacono, of the Brooklyn restaurant Lucali

"Mark's one of my favorite, favorite chefs. There's there's just something romantic about watching Mark make pizza, because he uses a wine bottle instead of a traditional rolling pin, and it's just, there's something romantic about that restaurant. And even though he's just making pizzas, it's one of my favorite spots to go. But you get to hear their philosophy. It's not just a profile, and we're not even really talking about Mark. We're trying to get his understanding of what it's like to be an Italian-American — very quickly — and inheriting the sort of ... I don't wanna say the burden, but the responsibility of carrying on that tradition that came with all the Italian immigrants to New York City."

On traveling to New York and Tokyo for the pizza episode

"We're trying to define what pizza is, how it came from, where do people think is the best pizza. And to sort of presuppose sometimes comical things, and maybe we don't get to prove it as a thesis, but I genuinely believe that, when I go to Tokyo, I believe that the best pizza in the world for me — I can't speak for anyone else — is in Tokyo, and creating those conversations, or sometimes maybe the best pizza in the world, for me, is in New Haven. Which again, all of these things are talked about, written about, but trying to present it and cobbled together in a way that maybe the audience might not have heard."

On how one food can taste totally different depending on where you are

"It really shows you that we're all making sort of the same thing. And what changes that are cultural beliefs, cultural biases. There's no universal truth about any food. Because we have so many beliefs and we have so many cultural truths, you're gonna have that variation in food, not just with ingredients. I mean, fried chicken is probably cooked the world around, all over, but it's a specific story for each person."

On the show exploring history and culture

"What better way to represent history and culture than through food? And fried chicken is a perfect example of just how dense a subject can be. One of the reasons it's dense is, rarely do people wanna talk about the terrible hardships that fried chicken was born out of, and then presenting questions like, should you even talk about it? Should you even know the history of fried chicken to enjoy fried chicken? Because fried chicken in and of itself is delicious, and these are some of the conversations we're trying to have."

On his favorite thing he ate in the making of the show

"That's pretty easy. Well, I'll say domestically it was the crawfish at Crawfish & Noodles in Houston, eating Viet-Cajun crawfish, which is a tremendous modern-day fusion that's happening before our very eyes. It's a merger of Vietnamese flavors and Cajun, which are very similar, believe it or not.

"And internationally I would have to say it's the real-deal Peking duck in Beijing, cooked over jujube wood, that's processed in a very special way that produces the most fabulous duck skin and juicy, juicy meat. That's a dish that I would travel to China just to eat. I really would. It's that good."